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ID
Source
Brief title
Health condition
aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage
Sponsors and support
Intervention
Outcome measures
Primary outcome
in hospital mortality
Secondary outcome
Peri-procedural complications, hemorrhagic complications, outcome using modified Rankin Scale, health costs
Background summary
Rationale: For long, delayed cerebral ischemia (DCI) was thought to be caused by subarachnoid blood-induced vasospasm. Growing experimental and clinical evidence now suggest activation of several (intravascular) pathophysiological pathways, affecting the microcirculation. Recently, in a retrospective analysis of our Academic Medical Center (AMC) aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) patient registry, we gained new insight into the possible beneficial effect of high-dose low-molecular weight heparin (LMWH): lower in-hospital mortality and more discharge to home. We therefore, hypothesize that treatment with high-dose LMWH not only reduces in-hospital mortality, but can also improve the clinical outcome in aSAH patients after six months, and aim to determine the effect of high-dose LMWH in a randomized controlled trial: ‘Improving outcome in SubaraChnoid HEMorrhage wIth NAdroparin’ (= ISCHEMIA-study).
Objective: Our primary objective is to evaluate whether aSAH patients treated with high-dose (i.e. therapeutic) LMWH have lower in-hospital mortality rate, compared to aSAH patients treated with conventional (prophylactic) dose LMWH. Secondary objectives are whether high-dose LMWH improves clinical outcome at six months, reduces complications during admission and non-home discharge location, improves quality of life and cognitive functioning at six months, and reduces health care costs.
Study Design: A single-center, prospective, phase III randomized, controlled, clinical trial (RCT) in patients with an aSAH treated with endovascular coiling of the causative aneurysm.
Study population ASAH patients ≥18 years old, admitted to the Academic Medical Center (AMC), in whom the causative aneurysm is treated with endovascular coiling.
Intervention: After the causative aneurysm is coiled, patients will be randomized into two groups: (1) Intervention group: switch standard-dose to high-dose (=therapeutic) LMWH; nadroparin, twice daily 5700 AxaIU, subcutaneously, starting within 24 hours after coiling and continued until discharge; (2) Control group: continue standard-dose (=thrombosis prophylaxis) LMWH; nadroparin, once daily 2850 AxaIU, subcutaneously, continued until discharge.
Main study parameters/endpoints: In-hospital mortality rate; clinical outcome after six months’ follow-up, measured with the modified Rankin Scale; complications during admission (hemorrhagic complications, DCI, shunt-dependent hydrocephalus, seizures, delirium and hospital-acquired nosocomial infections); discharge location; cerebral infarctions on MR-imaging six months after SAH, not attributable to endovascular treatment or ventricular catheter placement; quality of life (EQ-5D) and cognitive functioning (Montreal Cognitive Assessment ) at six months; health care costs.
Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: An aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage is a life-threatening form of stroke: mortality amounts to 32%-39%, and 50% of the survivors experience a permanent disability. On admission, approximately half of the patients is in a good neurological condition (grade I), and one in 10 presents comatose (grade V). Nowadays, 80% of patients is treated endovascularly by the interventional neuroradiologist. After endovascular coiling of the causative aneurysm, all subjects, regardless of neurological grade on admission, will be randomly allocated to high-dose (therapeutic) LMWH or conventional (prophylactic) LMWH therapy. Hereby, study results will be generalizable to the whole aSAH population treated with endovascular coiling. The safety of this medication in these patients has been confirmed in our retrospective study; specifically, there was no increase in hemorrhagic events. The expected benefit is large as half of the patients is younger than 55-years-old, and reduction in death, or disability, leading to improved clinical outcome, could significantly decrease the loss of productive life years, with enormous economic and social impact.
Study design
Baseline, 3 and 6 months
Intervention
High-dose nadroparin
Meibergdreef 9
D. Verbaan
Amsterdam 1105 AZ
The Netherlands
+31 (0)20 5666564
D.Verbaan@amc.uva.nl
Meibergdreef 9
D. Verbaan
Amsterdam 1105 AZ
The Netherlands
+31 (0)20 5666564
D.Verbaan@amc.uva.nl
Inclusion criteria
Adult
Occluded aneurysm
Exclusion criteria
untreated aneurysm
Design
Recruitment
Followed up by the following (possibly more current) registration
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Other (possibly less up-to-date) registrations in this register
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In other registers
Register | ID |
---|---|
NTR-new | NL6900 |
NTR-old | NTR7087 |
Other | : Informatie niet aangeleverd door onderzoeker |